31 Cows on the Marsh Meadowsweet is home of local dairy Marshlands are drained to become pastures for growing hay and grazing cattle Editor's note: Recent research efforts have located documents showing that the many sources identifying the Sherman family as having built the historic Maybeck-style home in the early 1900s were incorrect. I have modified this page to present the recently discovered correct information. Jana Haehl 4/2/2016 Old Jack, prize bull of Meadowsweet Farm, 1930. THE HOME ABOVE THE LIBRARY HAS BEEN KNOWN at various times as Casa Amina, Overmarsh, and Villa Madera during the years since it was built in 1909 by Mrs. and Mrs. Howard Clinton Tibbitts of San Francisco. (Years later, William Isaac Pixley said that the home was sited on top of the compacted roadbed that the North Pacific Coast Railroad built when they ran the first tracks along there in the 1870s. That route was abandoned after the Alto tunnel was cut through Corte Madera Ridge in 1884.) The lovely Maybeck-style home was sold in 1914 to the Tibbitts' good friend Harriet Pratt Sherman, the former wife of Moses T. Sherman, a wealthy Southern California developer and railroad magnate. Harriet Sherman preferred living in Northern California, and she shared the home with her elderly parents and her two grown daughters, Hazeltine and Lucy. When Harriet later remarried and moved away, she turned the home and its surrounding land over to Hazeltine. In 1921, Hazeltine Sherman married Frank Keever, a civil engineer who saw the potential for converting the marsh into pastures for raising hay and grazing cattle. He designed and constructed an ingenious system of floodgates to drain the tidelands and convert 1,400 acres into pastures. Keever persuaded his wife to enter the dairy business, and they called their innovative enterprise the Meadowsweet Farm Dairy. It was a model dairy, with milk from purebred cows processed in white-tiled rooms. Hundreds of cows, said to produce
COWS ON THE MARSH 139 Meadowsweet Farm Dairy, about 1932. The road in front of the dairy became Meadowsweet Drive. milk and cream of unsurpassed quality, were pastured in the flatlands, and many local young men found that employment in the dairy was a way to earn money during hard times in the early 1930s. The dairy prospered for ten years, but when Frank and Hazeltine were divorced, the cattle were shipped to the Shermans ranch in El Centro and the dairy routes were sold to Borden s. After a short time, the abandoned Meadowsweet Dairy property was sold to Hugh Porter. The Shermans house and surrounding land was bought about 1940 by San Francisco businessman Fred Sanford for his family. His daughter, Sammie Sanford Dunn, grew up there, and the home is is still owned by the Sanford/ Dunn family. For the past sixty years it has been called Villa Madera. Horse-drawn hay baler being used in the pasture at Meadowsweet Farm Dairy, about 1930. The creamery man s house and the sturdy stable built for the Shermans saddle horses were converted into attractive homes on Manzanita Avenue and Grace Court, respectively. Hugh Porter sold the town 23 and one-half acres of pastureland for $3,500 in 1937, for a town park an extravagance that brought
140 COWS ON THE MARSH outcries from a worried citizenry. Town Park is now recognized, of course, as one of Corte Madera s finest assets. The old Meadowsweet bottling room still stands, converted by Charlotte Conow into a schoolroom sixty years ago. This structure, the milking room, and the silo were all renovated and restored in the 1990s by Henry Corning, who saved them from being torn down for construction of new homes on the site. Float in parade supporting the National Recovery Act, which promoted job creation during the Depression. Meadowsweet's bottling room as it looked about 1930 (left), then as it looked in 1976 (bottom), many years after it had been converted to school and residential use.
COWS ON THE MARSH 141 The photograph above shows a view of Mount Tamalpais shrouded in fog, across the pastures of Meadowsweet, which were marshes with deep, meandering tidal channels until Frank Keever drained them for hayfields and cattle grazing in the late 1920s. The spot where the photo was taken is now in the rear parking lot at The Village. View in the 1980s from approximately the same spot as in the 1920s photograph above. The Corte Madera Inn is seen in the background, across the freeway. Old Corte Madera Square as seen from Christmas Tree Hill in the 1930s, showing Tamalpais Drive, one of the widest and straightest main streets in Marin thanks to Frank Keever, who dedicated the land in return for a tax break when he was experiencing financial woes.
142 COWS ON THE MARSH Brochure for Meadowsweet Dairy, 1930, a dairy second to none in the world...
Hay raking machine at Meadowsweet Farm, 1930. COWS ON THE MARSH 143 Paul Glud, the young foreman at Meadowsweet Farm Dairy. When the dairy closed, he went south to Calexico with the cattle and established his own Glud Farms there. He contributed these early photographs of Meadowsweet. Meadowsweet s weathervane atop the milking barn, still in place after the building's conversion to apartments in about 1940.
144 COWS ON THE MARSH Looking toward Meadowsweet from the highway roadbed after it was graded, but before it was paved, in 1929. Construction of the new state highway across the pastures of Meadowsweet in 1929, looking southward.
COWS ON THE MARSH 145 View of the bayside from Meadowsweet, about 1930. Cars on the new state highway, now Highway 101, in Corte Madera, about 1930.